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Home » Col Doug Macgregor: Ukraine Russia Talks Look Unlikely, Now What? (Transcript)

Col Doug Macgregor: Ukraine Russia Talks Look Unlikely, Now What? (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of defence and foreign policy analyst Douglas McGregor’s interview on Daniel Davis Deep Dive Podcast on “Ukraine Russia Talks Look Unlikely, Now What?”, August 26, 2025. 

Trump’s Peace Initiative: Reality TV or Genuine Diplomacy?

DANIEL DAVIS: Trump continues to press his move for peace between Russia and Ukraine, wants to end that war, really seems to want a Nobel Peace Prize pretty strongly, and keeps trying to advocate for the multiple sides to do whatever it takes to get the job done. He says that Trump or Putin wants to get a deal done. He says Zelensky, he thinks, wants to end the war.

But when you start looking at the terms that even what is desired on the Trump side, and then you start looking at the capacity of for the Western European side and the European Ukraine side itself, there’s starting to be some really big problems that are emerging. Even aside whether anybody wants to give in on some of the issues that they’re being pressed on and to try and make sense of some of that, especially look at the military aspects of this. We have back the ever popular Colonel Douglas MacGregor, Defense Informed Policy analyst, former advisor to the Secretary of defense, and the highly decorated combat veteran. Doug is always welcome to the show.

DOUGLAS MCGREGOR: Thanks, Dan.

DANIEL DAVIS: Well, listen, we’ve talked a number of times already about after Alaska and what Trump was really enthusiastic about, end of this war. We even go back further than that where he was going to end the war in a day and then 100 days and then a couple of weeks and 50 days, 10 days, and then, you know, none of those deadlines keep happening. Right now, we’re kind of in a period where he said, well, I think we’ll know something in a couple of weeks.

What do you make, first of all, is just Trump’s intent and his desire here, because it certainly is better than what we had with Biden, who wouldn’t even talk to Russia. But is his possibilities or is his push realistic?

The Alaska Meeting: Optics Over Substance

DOUGLAS MCGREGOR: Well, I agree that President Trump is a vast improvement over his predecessor, but as we both know, that’s not really saying very much. That’s a pretty low bar. But having said that, I think what we have to understand, and you know that I like President Trump personally, and I think his instincts or intentions are true, is that we’re witnessing one long, uninterrupted reality TV show.

Whatever President Trump does is designed for optics. In other words, the meeting in Alaska had very little substance to it. And I don’t think he was terribly concerned about the substance. He simply wanted to be seen as changing the climate, at least in broad terms with Russia. He wanted to be photographed with President Putin, surrounded by his F-22s or whatever the aircraft were that were present at the time. And of course, you had the B-2 bomber that overflew everything. This is all vintage Trump. He’s very theatrical. He knows how to stage things.

But the problem is that meetings on the spur of the moment, which is really what this was, mean there’s no systematic preparation. That usually takes months. Americans were used in the 1970s and 80s to summits between the Soviet Union and the United States, for instance, after many, many months of very hard work and preparation, detailed preparation for the meeting, such that the leaders who were present, Gorbachev and Reagan, for instance, were no longer debating over the substance of anything. They were talking about the impact and why they thought it made sense.

And when they spoke publicly, one had the impression that both had thoroughly digested the material and were reliably supporting it. I don’t see any of that with President Trump. So I think the Alaska meeting was a feel good moment and not much more.

And so when people say, “Well, where are we on the peace front and what kinds of agreements are in the offing?” I tell them, look, I don’t see any. There are no such agreements. Again, there has never been a strategy enunciated by President Trump and the administration. Frankly, whatever’s written on paper doesn’t matter because President Trump is impulse driven.

So at the end of the day, I just think we’re where we were months ago. There’s no resolution in sight. And you got to be very careful of these claims. “I could end this war in 24 hours,” you know, how well did that go down? That’s a lot of nonsense. But if you know nothing about Ukraine, know nothing about Eastern Europe, nothing about Russia, and you view yourself as a brilliant deal maker, this is sort of another exercise in selling the used car. And I don’t think that works. And so while he may have meant well, and I’m perfectly willing to accept that possibility, nothing of substance came out of it.

Washington Meetings: More of the Same

DANIEL DAVIS: And I think you could probably just carry that on through right to Washington, D.C. a week ago on Monday, when he had Zelensky and then the European leaders all paraded across the Oval Office, and again, I think that they reiterated where they were weeks, if not months before that. I don’t see any change in them either, do you?

DOUGLAS MCGREGOR: No, not yet. We can come back to that. I do want to make a comment, though, about this particular photograph, because General Kellogg apparently has endeared himself to the Russians quite a bit. He apparently has been using the same cell phone and cell phone number, though encrypted, over and over and over again for months, maybe years.

And as a result, the Russians were able to follow all of his activities, whatever he visited, Chasov Yar, Chernigov, any of these places. And it is being used for targeting. So that many of the targeted locations that I just mentioned that he’s visited have been utterly and completely destroyed, along with whatever military personnel were present, including NATO and including us.